Design and performance of a scanning transmission x-ray microscope (STXM) at the Advanced Light Source is described. This instrument makes use of a high brightness undulator beamline and extends the STXM technique to new areas of research. After 2.5 years of development it is now an operational tool for research in polymer science, environmental chemistry, and magnetic materials.
Gold complexes that could act as antitumor agents have attracted great attention. Heterocyclic compounds and their metal complexes display a broad spectrum of pharmacological properties. The present study reports the preparation and characterization of four novel gold(I) complexes containing tertiary phosphine and new ligands 5-adamantyl-1,3-thiazolidine-2-thione, 3-methyladamantane-1,3,4-oxadiazole-2-thione. Spectroscopic data suggest that gold is coordinated to the exocyclic sulfur atom in all cases, as confirmed by X-ray crystallographic data obtained for complex (1) and supported by quantum-mechanical calculations. The cytotoxicity of the compounds has been evaluated in comparison to cisplatin and auranofin in three different tumor cell lines, colon cancer (CT26WT), metastatic skin melanoma (B16F10), mammary adenocarcinoma (4T1) and kidney normal cell (BHK-21). The gold complexes were more active than their respective free ligands and able to inhibit the thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) enzyme, even in the presence of albumin. Molecular modeling studies were carried out to understand the interaction between the compounds and the TrxR enzyme, considered as a potential target for new compounds in cancer treatment. The docking results show that the adamantane ring is essential to stabilize the ligand-enzyme complex prior the formation of covalent bond with gold center. The structure of the new gold compounds was established on the basis of spectroscopic data, DFT calculations and X-ray diffraction. TrxR inhibition was evaluated and the results correlated with the assays in tumor cells, suggesting the TrxR as possible target for these compounds.
The
drugs currently used to treat leishmaniases have limitations concerning
cost, efficacy, and safety, making the search for new therapeutic
approaches urgent. We found that the gold(I)-derived complexes were
active against L. infantum and L. braziliensis intracellular amastigotes with IC50 values ranging from
0.5 to 5.5 μM. All gold(I) complexes were potent inhibitors
of trypanothione reductase (TR), with enzyme IC50 values
ranging from 1 to 7.8 μM. Triethylphosphine-derived complexes
enhanced reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and decreased mitochondrial
respiration after 2 h of exposure, indicating that gold(I) complexes
cause oxidative stress by direct ROS production, by causing mitochondrial
damage or by impairing TR activity and thus accumulating ROS. There
was no cross-resistance to antimony; in fact, SbR (antimony-resistant
mutants) strains were hypersensitive to some of the complexes. BALB/c
mice infected with luciferase-expressing L. braziliensis or L. amazonensis and treated orally with
12.5 mg/kg/day of AdT Et (3) or AdO Et (4) presented reduced lesion size and parasite burden, as revealed
by bioimaging. The combination of (3) and miltefosine
allowed for a 50% reduction in miltefosine treatment time. Complexes 3 and 4 presented favorable pharmacokinetic and
toxicity profiles that encourage further drug development studies.
Gold(I) complexes are promising antileishmanial agents, with a potential
for therapeutic use, including in leishmaniasis caused by antimony-resistant
parasites.
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